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arxiv: 2512.10343 · v2 · submitted 2025-12-11 · 🌀 gr-qc · astro-ph.HE· astro-ph.SR· hep-th

Recognition: 2 theorem links

· Lean Theorem

Stationary Stars Are Axisymmetric in Higher Curvature Gravity

Authors on Pith no claims yet

Pith reviewed 2026-05-16 23:41 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌀 gr-qc astro-ph.HEastro-ph.SRhep-th
keywords axisymmetrystationary starshigher curvature gravityKilling symmetrythermodynamic equilibriumdiffeomorphism invarianceasymptotic flatness
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The pith

Stationary stars in higher curvature gravity are axisymmetric because their interior Killing symmetry extends uniquely to the exterior.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

This paper aims to prove that stationary stellar configurations remain axisymmetric in a wide range of modified gravity theories that include higher curvature terms. It does so by showing how the symmetry from thermodynamic equilibrium inside the star extends to the exterior spacetime. The extension relies on asymptotic flatness and smoothness conditions. A reader would care as it indicates that axisymmetry is a general property of covariant gravitational theories, not limited to Einstein's general relativity. This applies to the equilibrium states of stars like neutron stars or white dwarfs.

Core claim

Assuming asymptotic flatness and standard smoothness requirements, the Killing symmetry implied by thermodynamic equilibrium inside the star uniquely extends to the exterior region, thereby enforcing rotational invariance. This demonstrates that axisymmetry of stationary stellar configurations is not a feature peculiar to Einstein gravity but a universal property of generally covariant gravitational theories, persisting even in the presence of higher curvature corrections.

What carries the argument

The unique extension of the interior Killing symmetry to the exterior spacetime.

If this is right

  • Stationary stars are axisymmetric in higher curvature theories of gravity.
  • The axisymmetry theorem for stars extends beyond general relativity.
  • Thermodynamic equilibrium enforces rotational invariance through symmetry extension.
  • Compact objects in equilibrium are axisymmetric in diffeomorphism invariant metric theories.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Non-axisymmetric stationary stars, if found, would indicate a violation of the smoothness or asymptotic flatness assumptions.
  • The approach could be extended to analyze symmetry in other modified gravity scenarios for stars.
  • Numerical relativity simulations in higher curvature theories should yield axisymmetric solutions for stationary cases.

Load-bearing premise

The assumption that the interior Killing symmetry from thermodynamic equilibrium extends uniquely to the exterior under asymptotic flatness and smoothness conditions.

What would settle it

Constructing or observing a stationary non-axisymmetric star in a higher curvature gravity theory while maintaining asymptotic flatness and smoothness would falsify the central claim.

read the original abstract

The final equilibrium stage of stellar evolution can result in either a black hole or a compact object such as a white dwarf or neutron star. In general relativity, both stationary black holes and stationary stellar configurations are known to be axisymmetric, and black hole rigidity has been extended to several higher curvature modifications of gravity. In contrast, no comparable result had previously been established for stationary stars beyond general relativity. In this work we extend the stellar axisymmetry theorem to a broad class of diffeomorphism invariant metric theories. Assuming asymptotic flatness and standard smoothness requirements, we show that the Killing symmetry implied by thermodynamic equilibrium inside the star uniquely extends to the exterior region, thereby enforcing rotational invariance. This demonstrates that axisymmetry of stationary stellar configurations is not a feature peculiar to Einstein gravity but a universal property of generally covariant gravitational theories, persisting even in the presence of higher curvature corrections.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper proves that stationary stellar configurations are axisymmetric in a broad class of diffeomorphism-invariant metric theories of gravity that include higher-curvature corrections. Assuming asymptotic flatness and standard smoothness, the authors show that the timelike Killing vector implied by thermodynamic equilibrium in the stellar interior extends uniquely across the surface to the exterior vacuum region, thereby enforcing axisymmetry. This generalizes the corresponding result from general relativity.

Significance. If the central extension argument holds, the result establishes axisymmetry of stationary stars as a universal feature of generally covariant gravitational theories rather than a special property of Einstein gravity. It supplies a rigorous theorem that can underpin modeling assumptions for compact objects in modified gravity and complements existing rigidity results for black holes in higher-curvature theories.

major comments (1)
  1. [Proof of the main theorem (likely §3 or §4)] The load-bearing step is the claimed unique extension of the interior Killing vector to the exterior. In higher-curvature theories the vacuum field equations are fourth-order (or higher), so the system satisfied by a putative Killing vector is no longer strictly elliptic at the same differential order as the second-order Einstein case. The manuscript must demonstrate explicitly (e.g., via the reduced equations or a maximum-principle argument) that asymptotic flatness plus interior data still fix the exterior solution uniquely; otherwise the axisymmetry conclusion does not follow.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Introduction] The precise subclass of diffeomorphism-invariant theories (e.g., which curvature invariants are allowed) should be stated at the outset with an explicit Lagrangian or field-equation form.
  2. [Notation and preliminaries] Notation for the Killing vector, its norm, and the surface-matching conditions should be introduced once and used consistently; a short table of symbols would help.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their careful reading and for highlighting the need for explicit justification of uniqueness in the extension argument. We address the major comment below and will revise the manuscript to strengthen the presentation of the proof.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: The load-bearing step is the claimed unique extension of the interior Killing vector to the exterior. In higher-curvature theories the vacuum field equations are fourth-order (or higher), so the system satisfied by a putative Killing vector is no longer strictly elliptic at the same differential order as the second-order Einstein case. The manuscript must demonstrate explicitly (e.g., via the reduced equations or a maximum-principle argument) that asymptotic flatness plus interior data still fix the exterior solution uniquely; otherwise the axisymmetry conclusion does not follow.

    Authors: We agree that the higher differential order of the vacuum equations in these theories requires an explicit demonstration of uniqueness rather than an appeal to the second-order GR case. In the manuscript, the interior timelike Killing vector is fixed by the thermodynamic equilibrium condition (vanishing heat flux and rigid rotation), and the matching conditions across the stellar surface supply the full set of Cauchy data (the vector and its derivatives up to the requisite order) for the exterior vacuum problem. Under asymptotic flatness, this data uniquely determines the exterior solution because the higher-order equations for the Killing vector can be reduced to a quasilinear elliptic system whose principal part admits a maximum principle (after suitable gauge fixing). We will revise §3 to include: (i) the explicit reduction of the higher-curvature field equations to the equation satisfied by the Killing vector in the exterior, (ii) a statement of the adapted maximum-principle argument with the necessary boundary conditions at the surface and at infinity, and (iii) a brief reference to the relevant uniqueness results for higher-order elliptic operators in asymptotically flat settings. This addition makes the extension step fully rigorous while leaving the overall theorem unchanged. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; uniqueness extension is a standard mathematical claim

full rationale

The paper's derivation chain rests on showing that a timelike Killing vector from interior thermodynamic equilibrium extends uniquely to the exterior under asymptotic flatness and smoothness, thereby enforcing axisymmetry in diffeomorphism-invariant higher-curvature theories. This is presented as an extension of known GR rigidity results rather than a self-referential definition or fitted prediction. No equations or steps in the abstract reduce the claimed result to its inputs by construction, and no load-bearing self-citation of an unverified uniqueness theorem is quoted. The argument is self-contained against external mathematical benchmarks of elliptic systems and boundary-value uniqueness; the skeptic concern about higher-order equations pertains to correctness, not circularity.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 3 axioms · 0 invented entities

The result rests on standard background assumptions in gravitational physics rather than new free parameters or invented entities.

axioms (3)
  • domain assumption Diffeomorphism invariance of the metric theory
    Invoked to define the broad class of theories considered.
  • domain assumption Asymptotic flatness
    Required for the exterior region and uniqueness of the Killing extension.
  • domain assumption Standard smoothness requirements
    Needed to guarantee unique extension of the interior Killing symmetry.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5457 in / 1285 out tokens · 35426 ms · 2026-05-16T23:41:18.027011+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

46 extracted references · 46 canonical work pages · 1 internal anchor

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